2016
DOI: 10.2139/ssrn.2906945
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Identifying Binding Constraints in Education

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Cited by 38 publications
(26 citation statements)
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“…The poorest 80% of South African learners possess, on average, reading skills which rank among the worst in the world [8]. For example, 60% of South African grade 6 learners are unable to read with comprehension in any language [9]. Pretorius and Spaull [10] identify inability to decode text accurately as the primary problem, with barking at print being an additional problem among many of those relatively stronger learners who are at least able to undergo text-decoding.…”
Section: Problem Statementmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The poorest 80% of South African learners possess, on average, reading skills which rank among the worst in the world [8]. For example, 60% of South African grade 6 learners are unable to read with comprehension in any language [9]. Pretorius and Spaull [10] identify inability to decode text accurately as the primary problem, with barking at print being an additional problem among many of those relatively stronger learners who are at least able to undergo text-decoding.…”
Section: Problem Statementmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…26 However, such self-study is vital for a township learner to be able to mitigate the poor class time usage, limited and low-quality teacherlearner contact time, limited and sporadic homework assignment and control and general dysfunctionality of the typical township school. 40 These suggest that good reading comprehension is most needed in the very environments which least foster it. The finding that there was a higher prevalence of reading avoidance and guessing for the less familiar, text-heavy quiz than the more familiar, less text-heavy quiz is unsurprising and illustrates the limitation which a low ability to read with comprehension imposes on effective learning of more complex science concepts.…”
Section: Quiz Engagementmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In such contexts exploring ways to enhance knowledge transfer to more complex settings is likely to be feasible. In the typical South African low-quintile context, where rates of passing on merit in grades 8-11 may be 20% or lower (Branson, Hofmeyr, & Lam, 2014) and teachers are often not familiar with the content knowledge (Van der Berg et al, 2016), we first face the challenge of helping learners to recall knowledge and become able to perform routine operations stipulated by the curriculum (Stott, 2017;Van der Berg et al, 2016). I present three reasons to support this view.…”
Section: Support For An Instructivist Focus In the South African Lowqmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…South African low-quintile schools typically lack all these features (Hoadley, 2018). One of the reasons for the greater implementation of instructivist pedagogies is that they are timeefficient (Klahr, 2009), a much-needed feature in South African low-quintile schools where the time available for learning and teaching is severely reduced by school dysfunctionality (Van der Berg et al, 2016). In addition, the social, epistemological, and pedagogical culture present in South African low-quintile schools and, more broadly, in the majority of sub-Saharan African schools, is authoritarian in nature (Cooper, 2015;Tabulawa, 2013), with instructivist pedagogies predominating (Hoadley, 2018), making the adoption of skilful instructivist pedagogies more likely to lie within the zones of proximal development of the learners and implementation of the teachers (McKenney, 2013;Tabulawa, 2013), than the adoption of skilful constructivist pedagogies would be.…”
Section: Support For An Instructivist Focus In the South African Lowqmentioning
confidence: 99%
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